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Last updated on May 31, 2012 at 6:34 EDT

Dems Challenge ‘Surge’ Funding

January 9, 2007
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By David Espo THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — In a blunt challenge to President Bush, the leader of the Senate’s new Democratic majority said Monday he will “look at everything” within his power to wind down the war in Iraq, short of cutting off funding for troops already deployed.

“I think we’ve got to tell the president what he’s doing is wrong. We’ve got to start bringing our folks home,” said Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada, in remarks that portend a struggle if, as expected, Bush announces plans later this week for an increase in troop strength of 20,000.

Meanwhile, Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said one option under consideration would be for Congress to vote on denying the use of funds for such an increase in the U.S. deployment. Several officials said the Massachusetts Democrat was hoping lawmakers could register their views before any increase in troops was implemented.

More broadly, Reid signaled that Bush’s expected call for an additional $100 billion for the war would receive close scrutiny from newly empowered Democrats.

“We have a platform we didn’t have before, leader Pelosi and I, and we’re going to … focus attention on this war in many different ways,” said Reid. Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-San Francisco, suggested over the weekend using Congress’ power of the purse to restrain any troop buildup.

More than 3,000 U.S. troops have lost their lives in Iraq in a war nearing the end of its fourth year, and many Democrats attribute their success in last fall’s elections to public opposition to the conflict.

The election results, combined with an assessment by the bipartisan Iraq Study Group that the situation in Iraq was “grave and deteriorating,” coincided with Bush’s effort to begin work on a revised policy.

He is expected to make a nationwide televised address on the issue Wednesday. Several officials have said one leading option for Bush is a so-called “surge” in troop strength, in which about 20,000 troops would be added to the force already in place, in hopes that sectarian violence can be quelled.

The debate over the war has overshadowed the early days of the new Democratic-controlled Congress and a politically potent domestic agenda that leaders had planned.

The Senate began debate Monday on legislation to toughen ethics rules and crack down on lobbyists’ influence. The bill is a response to what Democrats have called a Republican “culture of corruption.” In the House, Democrats have already passed some ethics changes.

On security matters, they intend to begin work today on legislation to implement nearly all of the remaining recommendations of the commission that investigated the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

That legislation carries no price tag, and the money to pay for the increased protections will have to be approved separately. At a news conference, Pelosi sidestepped when asked about the cost, saying that any increases in spending would be offset to make sure they did not increase the deficit.

Legislation that Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., proposed in the Senate last year would have implemented the 9-11 commission’s recommendations at an estimated cost of $53.3 billion over five years.

Bush met with several members of Congress during the day, part of a series of meetings held in advance of announcing his new Iraq policy.

White House press secretary Tony Snow said the president “understands there is a lot of public anxiety” about the war. Yet he said that Americans “don’t want another Sept. 11″ type of terrorist attack and it is wiser to confront terrorists overseas in Iraq and other battlegrounds rather than in the United States.

As commander in chief, Bush has wide constitutional authority to direct the military. Congress’ principal power lies in its ability to control federal funding.

Yet the Democratic takeover in Congress means that for the first time since the war began, persistent critics of the administration’s policy are in control in both the House and Senate.

Other alternatives have emerged in recent days, although several officials said Democratic leaders had not yet settled on a course of action.

Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the Senate’s second-ranking Democrat, has suggested a limit on the number of troops that could be deployed to the war.

Other Democrats have discussed the possibility of forcing votes on nonbinding legislation calling on Bush to begin a troop withdrawal.Wednesday

* The president is expected to call for an increase of about 20,000 troops in Iraq in an address to the nation at 6 p.m. PST Wednesday.

(c) 2007 Daily Breeze. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.